The struggle of women in science is written in the stars.
In her 1968 poem, Planetarium,
the poet Adrienne Rich wrestles with the crisis of female identity through the
lens of astronomy. Rich wrote the poem after learning about the case of
Caroline Herschel, an astronomer born in Germany in 1750 who discovered
eight comets and three nebulae, and drew praise from the King of Prussia and
London’s Royal Astronomical Society. Yet Caroline remained obscure compared
with her brother, William, who discovered the planet Uranus.
To this day, astronomy remains
one of the only scientific fields that relies so heavily on ancient Greek and
Roman mythology for its naming conventions. Cosmology and mythology have been
interwoven throughout human history, so it’s not surprising that modern-day
astronomers have inherited this tradition. But classical mythology is deeply
misogynistic, and using it to identify celestial bodies contributes to a
scientific culture that diminishes the achievements of women like Caroline. Male
deities and figures reign with nearly unlimited power, while their female
counterparts suffer violence and humiliation.
Among the
myths we have used to name and claim the heavens is Cassiopeia, a constellation
in the northern hemisphere. It is named for a mythical queen of Aethiopia, whom
Poseidon punished for her vanity by lashing her to her throne. Cassiopeia’s
daughter, Andromeda, was also made to suffer for her mother’s sins by being
chained naked to a rock, where she waited for the sea monster Cetus to rape
her. In the myth, Perseus saved Andromeda and took her as his wife, but as a
constellation, she still waits chained to her rock.
The Pleiades,
also known as the Seven Sisters, is a cluster of stars in the Taurus
constellation. The Seven Sisters were once women who danced together under the
night sky, but Orion desired them, so he hunted them for seven years. To help
the sisters escape, Zeus turned them all into stars – but Orion, another
constellation, still chases them night after night.
Male astronomers,
when they look at the sky, can find more uplifting role models. The
constellations named after men tell stories of heroism and conquest, not
submission and subjugation. Even today, NASA continues to recycle the names of
mythological figures and great men of history when naming spacecraft and
missions. Orion, a crewed spacecraft meant to facilitate travel to Mars, is
named for the same Orion that hunted the Seven Sisters. Kepler, Galileo,
Copernicus, and Cassini – names pulled from the scientific establishment that
excluded women like Caroline – are all unmanned spacecraft sent to explore the
cosmos. Even spacecraft with seemingly gender neutral names are coded male:
Voyager and Pioneer evoke the men who heroically left home and hearth on
voyages of exploration.
There are
exceptions. Sojourner, a Mars rover, was named after Sojourner Truth, the
escaped slave who became a women’s rights activist and abolitionist. But it’s
telling that this name was suggested by a 12-year-old girl in an essay contest,
rather than originating in the scientific establishment. ARTEMIS, a spacecraft
in orbit behind the Moon, is named for the Greek goddess of the hunt, virginity
and childbirth. Yet this too has gendered implications, since Artemis is
associated with purity and motherhood, two features of classical femininity.
Juno, an unmanned spacecraft, is currently observing the planet Jupiter; in
Roman mythology, she was Jupiter’s wife, and had the ability to see
through the clouds of mist that he used to conceal his infidelities. Juno
the spacecraft will attempt the same thing – and so even now, when we send a
female-named spacecraft to investigate the cosmos, the mission invokes a
domestic metaphor. (Alice Bowman, NASA’s Mission Operations Manager for the New
Horizons’ mission to study the outer edges of the solar system, is commonly
referred to as ‘MOM’.)
Today, the skies are still
filtered through this tradition of mythic misogyny. Naming
conventions for spacecraft and constellations are a subtle but significant way
that the discipline of astronomy perpetuates a male-dominated culture.
Simply giving more celestial bodies female names is not the
solution. Rather, change must begin with the recognition that astronomy’s
self-image is built upon an age-old habit of telling stories about the abuse of
women.
Source: Aeon
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